[Submitted courtesy DSNurse]
For Immediate release
Contact Norma Smith/Chris Strow |
Congressman Jack Metcalf announced to a House Committee investigating
Gulf War illnesses today that he has issued a report stating that squalene,
a substance in unapproved vaccine adjuvant formulations, was found in
the anthrax vaccine in amounts that could boost immune response---raising
the possibility that squalene was used in innoculations given to gulf
War era vets. GAO science investigators have documented concerns regarding
the use of novel adjuvant formulations in vaccines, including squalene.
Metcalf compiled the report over
a three year period, putting together a team led by his special Assistant,Norma
Smith. It contains a series of documented conclusions, and an extensive
compilation of supporting documents. Congressman
Metclaf's statement to the House Subcommittee on National Security,Veterans
Affairs, and International Relations.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Executive Summary
Congressman Jack Metcalf has issued a report culminating a three year
investigation into the conduct of the DOD (Department of Defense) with
regard to the possibility that squalene, a substance in vaccine adjuvant
formulations not approved by the FDA, was used in inoculations given
to Gulf War era service personnel. According to the GAO (General Accounting
Office), scientists have expressed safety concerns regarding the use
of novel adjuvant formulations in vaccines, including squalene. The
report reveals that the FDA has found trace amounts of scalene in the
anthrax vaccine. The amounts recorded are enough to "boost immune
response," according to immunology professor Dr. Dorothy Lewis
of Baylor University. Therefore, the report concludes that immediate
action should be taken to halt the current AVIP (Anthrax Vaccination
Immunization Program). It further states that an aggressive investigation
must be undertaken to determine the source of the squalene, and the
potential health consequences to those who have been vaccinated, both
during and after the Gulf War. The report also documents at length DOD
"stonewalling" attempts to resolve this issue, which GAO investigators
characterized as "a pattern of deception." The GAO stated
the DOD denied conducting extensive squalene testing before the Gulf
War, then admitted it after being confronted with the public record.
The GAO revealed that DOD officials deliberating deployment of the anthrax
vaccine expressed a "willingness to jump out and, use everything:"
in discussing experimental vaccines containing adjuvants not approved
by the FDA. GAO also found Peter Collis, DOD official who headed vaccine
efforts, refused to cooperate with them. The report states that the
DOD has refused to act in good faith upon the GAO recommendation to
replicate the findings of a test developed by renowned virologist Dr.
Robert Gary of Tulane University, although DOD admitted they could easily
do so. The work of theTulane researchers has been peer-reviewed in a
scientific publication of high standing. Finally, the report states
that "Congress should take immediate action to review the findings
of the GAO and the Armed Services Epidemiological Board, and provide
independent oversight for the immediate implementation of their recommendations.
"The board called on the DOD to engage in close cooperation with
the Tulane researchers. Congressman Metcalf believes it is clearly within
the oversight responsibility of the Congress to get to the bottom of
the labyrinth that has become known as "GulfWar Illnesses."
We have an obligation to pursue the truth, wherever it may lead us.
To do less would be to act dishonorably reward the dedicated men and
women who stand between us and a dangerous world, willing to die if
necessary to defend our nation.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Table of Contents Page 1 The Request
For Investigation 2 Section One The Investigation: A Pattern of Deception
7 Section Two The Stonewalling and Obfuscation 11 Section Three FDA
Testing Reveals Squalene in Anthrax Vaccine 12 Conclusion 13 Footnotes
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------Appendix
24 - Appendix 25 - Appendix 26
STATEMENT FOR HEARING RECORD The House Subcommittee on National Security,
Veterans Affairs, and International Relations January 24, 2002 Submitted
by:Robert F. Garry, Ph.D., Professor
Department of Microbiology and Immunology
Tulane Medical School, Room 568 JBJ
1430 Tulane Avenue
New Orleans, Louisiana 70112
SUMMARY This Statement concerns our research with
anti-squalene antibodies, including the discovery of these antibodies
in the blood of patients with Gulf War illness. Our published data and
additional data which has been accepted for publication strongly suggests
that Gulf War illness is closely associated with an abnormal immune
response to squalene indicated by the presence of these antibodies.
Our research also links specific lots of anthrax vaccine known to contain
squalene to the production of anti-squalene antibodies. In addition,
our research demonstrates that the blood test for detecting these antibodies,
the anti-squalene antibody assay, may be an excellent tool to aid in
the diagnosis of Gulf War illness. U.S. Army researchers have verified
our discovery of the antibodies and, in May of this year, submitted
a patent application covering their anti-squalene antibody work. Our
patent, U.S. Patent No. 6,214,566, "Method for Detecting Anti-Squalene
Antibodies," which we believe covers the same technology, had already
issued in April of this year. The Army researchers have made a disingenuous
attempt to discredit our work, and they have not yet published any studies
designed to confirm our discovery of a link between the antibodies and
Gulf War illness, though they state that such studies may be feasible.
We believe that such confirmatory studies and additional studies should
be undertaken without delay. We also believe that the anti-squalene
antibody assay should immediately be made available under government
sponsorship to all physicians interested in using it to investigate
the condition of their Gulf War illness patients. DATA AND OBSERVATIONS
Research data which we published in February 2000 strongly suggests
that anti-squalene antibodies are closely associated with Gulf War illness.
Specifically, we found in our study participants that 95% of the Gulf
War veterans with Gulf War illness and 100% of the non- deployed veterans
with Gulf War illness were positive for the presence of anti-squalene
antibodies, while 0% of the healthy deployed veterans were positive.
Additional research data which has now been accepted for publication
shows, in a limited number of samples tested, that an increased prevalence
of anti-squalene antibodies in Anthrax Vaccine Immunization Program
(AVIP) personnel correlated with administration of lots of anthrax vaccine
subsequently shown by the FDA to contain trace amounts o f squalene.
Our results strongly suggest that the production of anti-squalene antibodies
is linked to symptoms of Gulf War illness and to the presence of squalene
found in certain lots of anthrax vaccine. Though the source of the squalene
in the vaccine lots has not, to my knowledge, been identified, squalene
is used as an adjuvant in animal vaccines. The use of squalene as an
adjuvant in human vaccines has not been approved, and human exposure
to squalene in vaccines has been shown by others to cause immunological
symptoms similar to those found in Gulf War illness patients. Gulf War
illness is present both in Gulf War veterans who were deployed to the
Persian Gulf War theater of operations and in personnel who were not
deployed, including personnel who never left the United States. The
absence of an association between the presence of Gulf War illness and
deployment indicates that the causative agent or factor is not associated
with the Persian Gulf. Consistent with this observation are the results
of a recent epidemiological study finding that vaccinations that were
given to both deployed and non-deployed personnel are associated with
ill health. U.S. Army researchers have confirmed our discovery that
anti-squalene antibodies do exist and can reliably be detected, and
the Army researchers published this work in November 2000. Army representatives
filed a U.S. patent application covering anti-squalene antibody technology
on May 18, 2001, and we believe that the technology for which the patent
was filed is the same technology that was described in the November
2000 article. A U.S. patent covering our anti-squalene antibody technology
issued as of April 10, 2001. The patent is assigned to Tulane University
and is licensed to a New Orleans biomedical company. We believe that
the claims awarded in the Tulane patent cover the work that was published
by the Army researchers. On May 23, 2001, Tulane's licensee wrote a
letter to the Department of Defense offering to sublicense this patented
technology to the Army so that the Army researchers could perform a
study designed to confirm whether the antibodies are linked to Gulf
War illness. An Army representative declined this offer on June 6, 2001.
The journal that published the November 2000 article by the Army researchers
received the submitted article on April 18, 2000. The material submitted
to the journal on that date demonstrated that the Army researchers had
confirmed our discovery of anti-squalene antibodies. In June 2000, one
of these same researchers, an Army colonel, published a letter to the
editor of the journal which had published our original article in February
2000. In the June 2000 letter, the colonel stated that our published
results constituted a "new, unproven assay that claims to detect
a novel antibody." The colonel made this statement despite the
f act that he had already confirmed our discovery and had already submitted
his findings for publication. Further, when the colonel's article appeared
in November 2000, it cited his own letter of June 2000 to call our original
findings into question. The colonel's letter expressing an opinion which
he himself had already proven to be baseless was thus used twice in
efforts to discredit our work. The last paragraph of the November 2000
article published by the Army researchers reads as follows: "With
the development of the ELISA using PVDF membranes, as described in this
paper, it may now be possible to undertake studies with serum from sick
and healthy individuals to determine whether naturally-occurring antibodies
to SQE [squalene] exist, and whether the appearance or amounts of such
antibodies have any relationship to normal physiologic functions or
whether they are associated with any illness." With the serum samples
available to the Army researchers, such studies would in our opinion
be very straightforward and would take a short amount of time to complete.
The Army has had its own version of the necessary test available for
more than two years but has published no such studies. Based on the
Army's actions with respect to our work, we suspect that the Army has
in fact conducted these studies and elected not to publish them. Our
published research makes a compelling case that, first, anti-squalene
antibodies exist, and second, that there is a link between the antibodies
and Gulf War illness. Before the publication date of our research, some
of our research data was discussed in a GAO report to the Honorable
Jack Metcalf entitled Gulf War Illnesses: Questions about the Presence
of Anti-Squalene Antibodies Can Be Resolved (GAO/NSIAD-99-5, March 1999).
The GAO report specifically recommended that the DoD conduct its own
research designed to re plicate or dispute our results. The colonel's
research group subsequently published a confirmatory study that looked
only at our first finding and ignored the second. A confirmatory study
of our second finding would be very easy for the Army to do in a short
time, and we find it difficult to believe that the colonel's group has
not already done such a study, since any good and inquisitive scientist
with ready access to test samples would want to do it. Instead of following
the GAO's recommendation, however, the colonel chose to publicly ignore
our second finding and to make misleading public statements that denigrated
our work. Later, when the Army and the colonel were offered the opportunity
to license our technology and finish the confirmatory work, they declined
the offer. The presence of anti-squalene antibodies in ill people and
the absence of the antibodies in healthy people is the first hard laboratory
evidence that Gulf War illness is what some might refer to as a "real
disease." It is also the first evidence that an abnormal immunological
response is under way in Gulf War illness patients. The anti-squalene
antibody assay thus represents the first laboratory test for Gulf War
illness. As such we believe that it has great clinical value as a diagnostic
aid, and it suggests that therapies designed to modulate the immune
response to antigens should be investigated in patients with Gulf War
illness. Recent unpublished observations from the Veterans Administration
indicate that there is a significant increase in the prevalence of the
neuro-degenerative disease amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) in Gulf
War veterans. The data that we published in February 2000 shows that
some of the patients who were ill with Gulf War illness and who tested
positive on the anti-squalene antibody assay exhibited neurological
symptoms. These results suggest that a possible relationship between
anti-squalene antibodies and ALS in Gulf War veterans may exist and
should be investigated. Further research with the anti-squalene antibody
assay continues on a limited scale using private funds, but the test
is not currently available to individual physicians for investigation
into the conditions of their patients. More than two years have now
elapsed since DoD researchers have had access to a version of this test.
While the DoD has proceeded with an attempt to win its own patent on
the test, in our opinion it has done nothing with the test to help any
Gulf War illness patient. It is therefore our very strong recommendation
that an agency of the U.S. government immediately commission a large
study of anti-squalene antibodies and Gulf War era veterans and other
personnel, including appropriate ALS patients. Such an investigation
should be conducted in the context of, or coordinated with, a population-based
study of Gulf War era veterans similar to the ongoing and successful
Ranch Hand study of Agent Orange. It is our further very strong recommendation
that an agency of the U.S. government immediately begin to provide the
anti-squalene antibody assay to all physicians treating patients with
Gulf War illness. REFERENCE INFORMATION (1) Our initial study concerning
anti-squalene antibodies was published in the February 2000 issue of
Experimental and Molecular Pathology. The results of this study strongly
suggest two things: (1) that humans can indeed raise serum antibodies
against squalene, and (2) that, in the people studied, the presence
of the antibodies correlated very closely with the presence of the symptoms
of Gulf War illness both in personnel who had been deployed to the Persian
Gulf theater and in personnel who had not been deployed there. A copy
of this article, entitled "Antibodies to Squalene in Gulf War Syndrome,"
is attached hereto ("the Asa/Garry article"). (2) The anthrax
bacillus is incapable of producing squalene, and squalene is not present
as a constituent of the growth medium used to produce the organism for
the anthrax vaccine. Squalene is widely used as a vaccine adjuvant in
animals, but it is clearly harmful to many humans when used in that
manner and is not approved for use in human vaccines.(3) A letter to
the editor published in the June 2000 issue of Experimental and Molecular
Pathology addresses the work presented in the Asa/Garry article. The
letter attempts to find fault with our testing technique, calling our
test a "... new, unproven assay that claims to detect a novel antibody
...." The letter further states the following: "The conclusions
of Asa and colleagues, purporting to correlate anti-squalene [sic] with
Gulf War illnesses, in our opinion, rely on circular logic. Positive
results with an assay not previously validated cannot be used as scientific
proof that antibodies to the antigen exist in samples of unknowns. It
is premature to proceed directly to testing serum samples from healthy
people and sick people before conducting the fundamental validation
steps." This letter was written by Col. Carl Alving of the Walter
Reed Army Institute of Research and John Grabenstein of the U.S. Army
Medical Command. A copy of this letter ("the Alving/Grabenstein
letter"), together with our published response and an editorial
note, is attached hereto. (4) In the November 2000 issue of the Journal
of Immunological Methods, four researchers from the Walter Reed Army
Institute of Research, including Col. Alving, published an article confirming
that anti-squalene antibodies do exist and can reliably be detected.
The study described in this article reproduces and expands upon our
work and validates our anti-squalene antibody assay. A copy of this
article, entitled "Induction and Detection of Antibodies to Squalene,"
is attached hereto ("the Alving article"). (5) A notation
by the Journal of Immunological Methods which appears under the title
line at the top of the Alving article states that the manuscript for
the article was received by the journal from Col. Alving and his colleagues
on 18 April 2000. The Alving/Grabenstein letter was published six weeks
later, in June 2000. This means that when Col. Alving and his colleague
Grabenstein were publicly characterizing our test as a "... new,
unproven assay that claims to detect a novel antibody ...," Col.
Alving and his other colleagues had already written the Alving article
confirming that the new antibodies did in fact exist. (6) The note from
the journal's editors which accompanies the Alving/Grabenstein letter
points out that this letter "... relates to methodology. Drs. Alving
and Grabenstein offer no data against the conclusions of Asa et al."
Since the Alving article confirms that the novel antibody was indeed
discovered by our detection method, the Alving/Grabenstein letter is
therefore rendered entirely meaningless by the Alving article. Despite
this, the Alving article includes the following paragraph: "What,
if any are the potential consequences of induction of antibodies to
SQE [squalene]? A recent publication claims to have detected antibodies
to SQE in sick but not in healthy individuals (Asa et al., 2000) [the
Asa/Garry article]. However, we believe that such a conclusion may be
premature, based on a technical critique of the reported Western blot-type
assay that was used (Alving and Grabenstein, 2000) [the Alving/Grabenstein
letter]." The Alving article thus cites the Alving/Grabenstein
letter, which the Alving article itself refutes, to call into question
our second discovery, that the anti-squalene antibodies we discovered
are found in sick but not healthy individuals. (7) After the Asa/Garry
article was published, we learned that in June 1999, investigators at
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) had assayed the Department
of Defense's anthrax vaccine for the presence of squalene. Using a sensitive
gas-liquid chromatography procedure, the FDA had identified squalene
in certain lot numbers (FAV 020, 030, 038, 043 and 047) of the vaccine.
Although the amounts of squalene found in these lots of the vaccine
by the FDA were small (parts per billion), in principle even these small
amounts may have been sufficient to induce in some vaccine recipients
the immune response that is now being manifested by the presence of
anti-squalene antibodies. The published work of other researchers has
strongly linked exposure to the anthrax vaccine and other vaccines to
the development of Gulf War illnesses. Moreover, many pathological effects
of exposure to squalene-containing vaccine adjuvants are well known
to rheumatologists, and a number of these pathologies bear striking
similarity to the signs and symptoms displayed by some ill Gulf War
era veterans. (8) On April 10, 2001, U.S. Patent No. 6,214,566, "Method
for Detecting Anti-Squalene Antibodies," was awarded and assigned
to Tulane University. A copy of this patent is attached. Tulane has
licensed the anti-squalene antibody technology to Autoimmune Technologies,
LLC of New Orleans. On May 23, 2001, the LLC Manager of that firm wrote
a letter to The Secretary of Defense with a copy to Col. Alving offering
to sublicense the patented technology to Department of Defense researchers.
On June 6, 2001, an intellectual property counsel of the Army wrote
back to decline the offer. Copies of both the May 23rd and the June
6th le tters are attached. (9) On October 22, 2001, in accordance with
37 CFR 404.6, the Department of the Army filed a notice of the "Availability
for Non-Exclusive, Exclusive, or Partially Exclusive Licensing of U.S.
Patent Application No. 09/859,389 entitled 'Detection of Antibodies
to Squalene in Serum' filed May 18, 2001." On November 8, 2001,
the LLC Manager of Autoimmune Technologies spoke on the telephone with
the patent attorney and the licensing officer at Fort Detrick who were
administering this license. Neither the attorney nor the licensing officer
was aware of the existence of U.S. Patent No. 6,214,566, and neither
person knew whether U.S. Patent Application No. 09/859,389 was based
upon the work done by Col. Alving and his colleagues.& nbsp; The
LLC Manager pointed out to both of them that, in our opinion, the work
done and published by Col. Alving's group is covered by the claims awarded
in U.S. Patent No. 6,214,566. The LLC Manager also asked for further
information about the technology which the Army was proposing to license.
As of December 18, 2001, the LLC Manager had not received this additional
information, and he wrote a letter on that date to both the attorney
and the licensing officer. A copy of that letter is attached.